Thermoregulatory sweating in palmar hyperhidrosis before and after upper thoracic sympathectomy

Abstract
✓ To assess thermoregulatory sweating in palmar hyperhidrosis, the authors determined the responses of three groups of normal, hyperhidrotic, and denervated subjects to a variety of ambient temperatures (TA's), 22°, 28°, and 41° C. The normal group had no hyperhidrosis, with intact T2–3 ganglia, the hyperhidrotic group had palm hyperhidrosis with intact T2–3 ganglia, and the denervated group had hyperhydrosis treated with T2–3 ganglionectomy. Both groups of hyperhidrotic and denervated subjects maintained oral and mean skin temperatures within normal limits displayed by the normal group over a wide range of TA's tested. The local sweating rate (LSR) of both the palms and the soles of the feet in the hyperhidrotic group was decreased to a minimal level by either the T2–3 ganglionectomy or the subcutaneous administration of atropine sulfate. Furthermore, the denervated group had a significantly lower LSR of both the forehead and the upper chest regions, but showed a higher LSR of both the ventral thigh and the lateral lumbar regions at a TA of 41° C when compared to the LSR of either the normal or the unoperated hyperhidrotic group. The data demonstrate that the surgical removal of both the T-2 and the T-3 ganglia, although producing no alterations in the thermal balance, does produce abnormalities in quantitative distribution of thermoregulatory sweating in man.